SuperDARN Observations of Semidiurnal Tidal Variability in the MLT and the Response to Sudden Stratospheric Warming Events
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 13:13 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
SuperDARN data show the migrating semidiurnal tide reduces immediately after SSW onset and strengthens anomalously 10-17 days later.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Using SuperDARN meteor wind data, the migrating semidiurnal tide is extracted from the meridional winds and shown to decrease in amplitude immediately after sudden stratospheric warming onset, then return anomalously strongly around 10-17 days later. The changes in background wind direction are concluded to modulate the tidal amplitude, with the midlatitude enhancement observed up to 60 degrees north.
What carries the argument
Separation of migrating versus nonmigrating semidiurnal tide components from meridional wind data using the SuperDARN network's longitudinal coverage around 60N.
Load-bearing premise
The assumption that the SuperDARN radars' longitudinal spread allows clean separation of migrating from nonmigrating semidiurnal tides without significant aliasing from other wave modes.
What would settle it
Independent high-latitude wind measurements showing no decrease in migrating SDT amplitude right after SSW onset or no anomalous increase 10-17 days later would falsify the reported response.
Figures
read the original abstract
Using meteor wind data from the Super Dual Auroral Radar Network (SuperDARN) in the Northern Hemisphere, we (1) demonstrate that the migrating (Sun-synchronous) tides can be separated from the nonmigrating components in the mesosphere and lower thermosphere (MLT) region and (2) use this to determine the response of the different components of the semidiurnal tide (SDT) to sudden stratospheric warming (SSW) conditions. The radars span a limited range of latitudes around 60$^{\circ}$ N and are located over nearly 180$^{\circ}$ of longitude. The migrating tide is extracted from the nonmigrating components observed in the meridional wind recorded from meteor ablation drift velocities around 95-km altitude, and a 20-year climatology of the different components is presented. The well-documented late summer and wintertime maxima in the semidiurnal winds are shown to be due primarily to the migrating SDT, whereas during late autumn and spring the nonmigrating components are at least as strong as the migrating SDT. The robust behavior of the SDT components during SSWs is then examined by compositing 13 SSW events associated with an elevated stratopause recorded between 1995 and 2013. The migrating SDT is seen to reduce in amplitude immediately after SSW onset and then return anomalously strongly around 10-17 days after the SSW onset. We conclude that changes in the underlying wind direction play a role in modulating the tidal amplitude during the evolution of SSWs and that the enhancement in the midlatitude migrating SDT (previously reported in modeling studies) is observed in the MLT at least up to 60$^{\circ}$ N.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript analyzes meteor wind data from the SuperDARN network in the Northern Hemisphere to separate migrating and nonmigrating semidiurnal tides (SDT) in the mesosphere and lower thermosphere (MLT) around 95 km altitude. Using data from radars spanning ~60°N latitude and nearly 180° longitude, it presents a 20-year climatology of the components and examines their response to 13 sudden stratospheric warming (SSW) events with elevated stratopause by compositing. The key findings are that the migrating SDT amplitude decreases immediately after SSW onset and enhances anomalously 10-17 days later, with the conclusion that background wind changes modulate the amplitude and that mid-latitude enhancements extend to 60°N.
Significance. This observational study provides direct evidence from radar winds for the behavior of SDT components during SSWs, supporting previous modeling results on mid-latitude enhancements. The climatology distinguishes the contributions of migrating and nonmigrating tides to seasonal maxima. If the separation is valid, it advances understanding of tidal variability and SSW impacts on the MLT region.
major comments (2)
- [Methods (tidal separation and extraction)] The tidal separation method (described where the migrating tide is extracted from nonmigrating components in meridional winds): with radars spanning only ~180° of longitude at a narrow latitude band around 60°N, the decomposition risks aliasing nonmigrating components (s=1, s=3, etc.) onto the migrating (s=2) estimate, directly affecting the reported post-SSW amplitude drop and 10-17 day enhancement.
- [Results (SSW event compositing)] The SSW composite analysis (13 events): the reported amplitude reduction immediately after onset and anomalous strengthening 10-17 days later lacks error bars, statistical significance tests, or sensitivity checks on the decomposition, undermining assessment of whether the changes are robust or contaminated by aliasing.
minor comments (1)
- [Abstract] The abstract states the radars are 'located over nearly 180° of longitude' but does not detail how this coverage is used in the least-squares or Fourier fit to isolate components.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
Thank you for the opportunity to respond to the referee's comments. We have carefully considered the points raised regarding the tidal separation method and the SSW composite analysis. Our responses are provided below, and we will make revisions to strengthen the manuscript.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Methods (tidal separation and extraction)] The tidal separation method (described where the migrating tide is extracted from nonmigrating components in meridional winds): with radars spanning only ~180° of longitude at a narrow latitude band around 60°N, the decomposition risks aliasing nonmigrating components (s=1, s=3, etc.) onto the migrating (s=2) estimate, directly affecting the reported post-SSW amplitude drop and 10-17 day enhancement.
Authors: We recognize the potential for aliasing in the tidal decomposition due to the limited longitudinal coverage of the SuperDARN radars. Our approach uses the meridional wind observations across the available longitudes to fit the migrating and nonmigrating components, assuming the dominant semidiurnal signals. However, to address this valid concern, we will expand the methods section to explicitly discuss the limitations of the longitude coverage and include sensitivity tests by excluding certain radars or assuming additional components to evaluate the robustness of the migrating tide estimates. revision: yes
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Referee: [Results (SSW event compositing)] The SSW composite analysis (13 events): the reported amplitude reduction immediately after onset and anomalous strengthening 10-17 days later lacks error bars, statistical significance tests, or sensitivity checks on the decomposition, undermining assessment of whether the changes are robust or contaminated by aliasing.
Authors: The referee is correct that the composite results would be strengthened by the inclusion of uncertainty estimates and statistical analysis. In the revised manuscript, we will add error bars to the composite plots (e.g., standard error of the mean across events) and perform statistical significance testing on the amplitude changes. Additionally, we will conduct sensitivity checks by varying the SSW event selection criteria and the tidal decomposition assumptions to confirm that the reported post-SSW behavior is not an artifact of aliasing. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity: direct observational analysis of radar winds
full rationale
The paper performs a direct observational study: it extracts semidiurnal tidal components from measured meteor wind velocities at ~95 km using the longitudinal spacing of SuperDARN radars (~180° at ~60°N), then composites 13 SSW events to examine amplitude changes. No equations, parameters, or derivations are presented that reduce by construction to fitted inputs, self-definitions, or self-citation chains. The migrating/nonmigrating separation is a data-processing step based on the radar geometry and Fourier decomposition of observed meridional winds; it does not invoke any uniqueness theorem, ansatz smuggled via citation, or renaming of known results. The central claims rest on measured velocities and event compositing, which are externally falsifiable against independent instruments. This matches the default expectation of a non-circular observational paper.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Meteor ablation drift velocities provide unbiased measurements of the horizontal wind at approximately 95 km altitude.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
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work page doi:10.1016/j 2017
discussion (0)
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